Family:William Twining and Elizabeth Deane (1)

Facts and Events
Marriage[2][4] Bef 1650 Eastham, Barnstable, Massachusetts, United StatesBased on marriage of daughter 1669
Children
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References
  1.   General Society of Mayflower Descendants. Mayflower Families Through Five Generations: Descendants of the Pilgrims Who Landed at Plymouth, Mass. December 1620. (New England - United States: General Society of Mayflower Descendants., Various)
    19:11.

    John Rogers m. Elizabeth Twining, d/o William Twining and Elizabeth Dean.

  2. Sons and Daughters of the Pilgrims. Lineages of members of the National Society of the Sons and Daughters of the Pilgrims to January 1, 1929, compiled from the original applications. (Baltimore [Maryland]: Genealogical Pub. Co., 1988)
    III: 219.

    Elizabeth Deane ( -1708) listed as wife of William Twining (1625-1703)

  3.   Find A Grave.

    Elizabeth Deane Twining; Birth: 1630; Plymouth County, Massachusetts, USA; Death: Dec. 28, 1708; Bucks County, Pennsylvania, USA; Spouse: William Twining (1619 - 1703); Find A Grave Memorial# 8988990

  4. "Dean - Twining - Snow", in Massachusetts Society of Mayflower Descendants. Mayflower Descendant: An Illustrated Quarterly Magazine of Pilgrim Genealogy, History and Biography
    Vol. 15, p. 51.

    Plymouth Colony Deed 3:334, dated 5 Apr 1669 "the said William Twinning ... for himselfe and Merriam Dean his sister and for Susanna Snow sister to his wife; which three are the proper and Joynt heires of their father Steven Deane" sold to Peter Warden of Yarmouth. Signed by William Twining, Elizabeth Twining, Stephen Snow, Susanna Snow and Meriam Dean.

  5.   Twining, Thomas Jefferson. Genealogy of the Twining family: descendants of William Twining, Sr., who came from Wales or England, and died at Eastham, Massachusetts, 1659, with information of other Twinings in Great Britain and America. (Salt Lake City, Utah: Genealogical Society of Utah, 1977)
    p. 25.

    William Twining Jr. m. Elizabeth Deane "about 1653, possibly several years sooner".
    [Note: based on daughters' marriages in 1669, and 1672, several years sooner seems the better choice.]